Favre’s Story Begins to Unravel

We have been plenty hard on the Green Bay Packers and Ted Thompson. They have badly mishandled this situation. If you are Ted Thompson and your Hall of Fame quarterback needs not just to be asked to return but begged, you do it. When his agent calls, you talk to him. And if that quarterback sends you a text message seeking to talk, you do not blow him off because you are on vacation.

Still, the report by Jay Glazer (confirmed by Jason Wilde) that the Packers welcomed Favre back in March, the first time he unretired, significantly changes my view on the entire situation. The fact that Favre was prepared to unretire and then retired, coupled with the comments he made at his press conference about having “nothing left to give” the Packers, makes the Packers’ hardline position much more understandable. At some point, it would have been irresponsible for the Packers to leave themselves subject to the whims and vicissitudes of someone who plainly does not know what he wants to do and whose many inconsistencies make him hard to trust.

It’s hard to tell what, exactly, Brett Favre’s real story is since he has not yet spoken publicly about his retirement/unretirement/retirement/unretirement. But if we assume that those closest to him — Bonita Favre, Scott Favre, Bus Cook and Steve Mariucci — have been accurately conveying his narrative it is clear that Favre has been dishonest several times throughout the process. Consider:

*When word first leaked that Favre would announce his retirement, several news outlets, sourcing those close to Favre, reported that he would have played at least another year if the Packers had signed Randy Moss. Favre later denied this. Inconsistent.

*Those same early reports had Scott Favre complaining that his brother didn’t really feel wanted by the Packers. Favre denied this at his tearful press conference. Now, Scott Favre is repeating the charge and Bonita Favre is saying the same thing. Inconsistent.

*According to Jay Glazer at Foxsports.com, Favre told the Packers in late March that he wanted to unretire. Jason Wilde has confirmed that report. But in an interview with Peter King for King’s April 4 column Favre claimed that a comeback was “the last thing I’m thinking about.” Favre went on: “I have no idea where that came from, but it certainly didn’t come from me. I’m happy about my decision and I haven’t once said, ‘I wonder if I made the wrong decision.’ I know it’s the right one.” Inconsistent.

*Earlier today, Favre told Steve Mariucci that he really just wants to play for the Packers. Why, then, did Bus Cook begin calling other NFL teams in April, within weeks of Favre telling the Packers he was going to comeback and then changing his mind? Inconsistent.

*Did the Packers tell Favre they wanted him to come back? Favre tells Mariucci that they did not, that this offseason was unlike previous years when they had urged him to return. But when Favre responded to the first question at his March 6 press conference — a question about whether he might change his mind in several months — he said specifically that he had talked to “Mike and Ted” and that “the team wants me back.” Inconsistent. He also said: “I know there’s been comments and issues in the press lately about why I’m leaving, whether or not the Packers did enough, whether or not Ted and Mike tried to convince me to stay. None of those things have anything to do with me retiring, and that’s from the heart.” Inconsistent. And this: “So the Packers wanted me, I know I can play, the fans, I guess they love me. They were camped out at my gate, the media. All these great things. Why would you retire? That’s a tough question.”

6 Responses to “Favre’s Story Begins to Unravel”

I feel badly for the Packers more than for Brett. The bottom line for the organization is, sooner or later, Brett will no longer play for Green Bay and they will have to move on. In three big games last year – the Bears game in Chicago, the Cowboys game, and the playoff game with the Giants – IMO Brett was nothing special, and that’s the last thing you want to say about someone who has been possibly your franchise’s best player ever. That’s a pretty stunning indictment, and it means to me that he’s really on the downside of his career.

He’s a good player now – no longer a consistently great player. He’s mortal and everyone in the NFL knows it. (Remember Reggie White’s last year or two in Green Bay, then in Carolina?) I think he should have retired and stay retired. What he’s doing now is needlessly dramatic and will make him look both egotistical and foolish in years to come.

Possibly the best move for the Packers is simply to keep him and let him be Rodgers’ backup. If someone outside the division (or the conference) makes them an offer they can’t refuse, great – otherwise he can compete just like everyone else. But as of March, it’s Aaron Rodgers’ job to lose.

As this drama has continued on now for the past few years I have grown increasingly disgusted with the behavior of Favre. He acts like a spoiled kid who can’t decide witch toy he wants to play with. The other galling issue is Brett acting as if he saved the Packers and they owe him. Frankly the Packers saved him when they took a risk on the then unknown QB. What Brett is doing is selfish and incredibly unerving. The team is ready to move on, Aaron has been patient for many years, and now Brett just wants to waltz back in like he owns the place?

Thank you for finally pointing out the irregularities in Favre’s version of events. Not calling him a liar but he certainly hasn’t been honest to the fans. I can’t take this drama anymore for crying out loud! Just stay RETIRED Favre!